Frank Merriwell in Gorilla Land;
or, The Search for the Missing Link

The schooner Saucy Susan, Justin Bellwood, master, lay at anchor
in the Fernand Vas River, near the west coast of Africa.

The Saucy Susan was a trader, loaded with cloth, beads, powder,
bullets, old muskets, brass and iron kettles, and such other articles as
the natives of the country were most likely to prize.

In exchange Captain Bellwood hoped to secure a cargo of ivory, mahogany,
and a few skins of wild beasts.

Frank Merriwell and Ephraim Gallup were passengers on the Saucy Susan,
having been taken aboard from an island upon which they had been cast by
the wrecking of another vessel, the Sea Fox.

Austin Ross, a self-appointed detective, who had been searching for
Ethel Driscoll, a lost heiress, through the instrumentality of Frank, who
became king of the natives when the savage king was struck dead by lightning
just as he was on the point of condemning his white captives to be slain
and eaten.

Ross and Miss Driscoll had been placed on board a vessel bound for --.
Ethel Driscoll had admired Frank Merriwell greatly, and she had told him
over and over that, if it were true that she had been left a fortune by
her uncle, she should give him some token of remembrance in reward for
his bravery in saving her from Bondalwe, a giant islander, who had tried
to make her become his wife.

Frank, with his usual gallantry, had assured Ethel that he had been
a thousand times rewarded by his satisfaction in being of service to her.

But that did not satisfy the girl, who was pretty and refined, for all
that she had been some time among the natives of the island, the old king
having adopted her as his daughter.

She was greatly fascinated by Frank, and she was plainly determined
to see him again when he should return to the United States. That was why
she insisted on giving him something as a remembrance token,

Elsie Bellwood was relieved when Ethel was placed on board the vessel
bound for New York.

Although the two girls had become warm friends in a very short time,
as girls usually do, Elsie had secretly been very jealous of Ethel.

In the past Elsie had been in love with Frank, but had tried to forget
him, knowing he was loved by another girl, Inza Burrage, who had befriended
Elsie when Captain Bellwood lost a vessel on Tiger Tooth Ledge, off Fardale
village.

Feeling that it would be a mean thing to attempt to "cut out" Inza,
Elsie had struggled to tear Frank Merriwell's image from her heart ---
had even repulsed him when he betrayed more than friendly interest in her.

But now Elsie began to believe it was useless for her to fight against
her own heart. She had said, over and over, that she hoped she might never
again meet Frank, but fate flung them together in the most remarkable manner,
so that the girl began to feel that it was useless to struggle against
destiny.

It was with her lips alone that she had said she hoped she might never
again meet Frank. All the while in her heart, she was longing to meet him.

As for Frank, he was no certain of himself no further than that, in
a certain way, he felt bound to Inza, having known her first. It was true
that it had been a case of boy and girl love between them, and that they
had not spoken seriously of their affection, but there had seemed to be
a tacit understanding that made them more than lovers for the moment.

In his dreams Frank sometimes saw dark-eyed Inza hovering near him,
and sometimes it was Elsie, with her golden hair and "eyes of tender blue."

Inza seemed to wield a strange and potent power over him when she was
near, while Elsie appealed to the tenderer side of his nature. Inza he
admired for her beauty, her ready wit, and her self-reliance; but Elsie
was a girl to shield and protect, to shelter from every ill wind and harm.

Frank saw there was something the trouble with Elsie, even after Ethel
Driscoll had left the schooner. She seemed to avoid him, and he fancied
there was a shadow on her pretty face.

He was determined to know what this meant, and he watched till he found
a good opportunity to corner her so she could not escape. Then he questioned
her.

At first Elsie declared that there was nothing the matter; but, by skilful
questioning, Frank finally obtained an inkling of the truth. He laughed
at her.

"Surely you are not jealous of Miss Driscoll!" he exclaimed, reproachfully.

Elsie hung her head, he cheeks crimson.

"Foolish girl!" cried Frank. "Why, Ethel Driscoll is nothing to me.
She was very unfortunate, and it was out of politeness that I treated her
with the greatest consideration."

"She is an heiress," said Elsie.

"What of that? I have a few dollars of my own."

"And she is very pretty."

"There are others."

"She is in love with you."

"Nonsense!"

"It is true."

"How do you know?"

"She told me so."

Frank whistled.

"This is interesting!"

"You act as if you didn't suspect it before."

"Well, I did not. She seemed very grateful to me for saving her from
the cannibals; but I did not fancy she had fallen in love with me. Are
you sure, Elsie?"

"Of course I am."

"Well, don't let it worry you."

"You do not care for her?"

"I think she is a charming girl, but I am not in love with her, Elsie.
How could I be with you near?"

He had secured her hand. She tried to draw it away, but he held it fast
and captured the other one. He bent nearer and nearer, his eyes on her
face.

"Elsie," he half whispered, "the last time we met was in the Great Dismal
Swamp of Florida, Then I told you how often I had thought of you --- how
often I had dreamed of you."

"Have you forgotten ------"

She checked herself, unable to utter Inza's name. She was trembling
a little, and the warm color was coming and going on her cheeks. Never
had she looked prettier than at that moment.

Frank felt his heart fluttering in his bosom, and one arm slipped about
her waist. He drew her close to him, and held her there, as he hastily
went on.

"I have forgotten nothing, Elsie. Fate has not been kind to us in everything,
but it has persisted in flinging us together. It has convinced me that
there is something that draws us one to the other. Fate was not so kind
to us when it brought us together so late the first time. And still we
were but boy and girl --- we are still. Perhaps we regard these matters
too seriously ----"

"No, no, Frank ---- I am sure not."

"Elsie, little sweetheart!"

Her head was bowed still lower, and her breath caused her lips to flutter.
She did not speak.

"Elsie, I tell you the truth when I say that I think of you oftener
than of any other. You come to me oftener in my dreams. I see you near
me, with your sky-blue eyes, your sunshiny hair, your lips like cupid's
bow, and your smile like a summer's morning. I have dreamed that you came
to me and whispered over and over, 'I love you Frank, I shall always love
you, and I shall love no other.' "

She was silent, enchanted; but her heart was throbbing wild with pleasure
that was painful. She had pictured this moment to herself, and now it had
come.

Frank, quite unconsciously, was becoming poetical. He did not pause
to form his phrases, but they came from his lips despite himself. Had he
thought what he was saying, he would have hesitated and regarded the language
as stilted and unnatural; but, as he did not pause to consider, his words
were the natural expression of the feelings within his heart.

"Sweetheart," he continued, "we are together now, so let's forget the
past --- let's be happy for the present. The future will give us what is
out due."

"Oh, Frank! how can I be quite happy when I think of her --- when I
think that I may be doing such as mean thing?"

"Elsie, we will write to her --- we will tell her everything. We are
still very young. We may think now that we shall never, never care for
anybody else; but I have read a hundred times that youth is changeable."

"I care not what you have read, Frank, I know my heart will never change."

He drew her still closer and kissed her, murmuring:

"Dear little Elsie!"

A gruff cough sounded behind them, causing them to part and turn in
no little consternation.

Captain Bellwood was standing near at hand, with his back towards them,
surveying the cloudless sky in a nautical fashion.

"For all that it's so calm now, there may be a storm kicking up, he
said. "The air seems very close around here."

The second day after the Saucy Susan dropped anchor in the Fernand
Vas, a white man came on board, brought off in one of the native boats.

He was a thin, long-necked, red-nosed man, wearing spectacles, and having
an unmistakable scholarly air, despite the fact that he was dressed in
coarse, stout clothing and heavy boots.

He introduced himself as Professor Johnson Bonner, a famous naturalist.
Frank had heard of Professor Bonner, and so was interested in the man at
once.

The professor explained that he had been left there eight days before
by an English vessel, and had just completed preparations for an extensive
trip into the interior.

"To confess the truth," smiled the lanky professor, "my mission is a
most remarkable one."

"Then you are not going inland to trade?" asked Captain Bellwood.

"No, sir. I have quite a different object in view."

"If you were going to trade, the natives here might cause you trouble
and delay."

"I have found that out. They are very jealous of their privilege to
trade with the white men who come to the coast, and they do not wish white
men to reach the interior tribes, from whom the finest ivory, and, in fact,
nearly all things of value to the trader come."

Captain Bellwood knew this well enough, having made several trading
voyages along the African coast.

"Their jealousy made it quite difficult for me to get away with my loads
of goods," Professor Bonner went on. "Now I have it all arranged. They
understand why I am carrying so many bundles."

"And why are you, if you are not going to the interior to trade?"

"My dear captain, I shall be forced to purchase my passage inland, and
so I must have a plentiful supply of goods and presents."

The old salt nodded.

"Very good, professor," he said, "I asked the question to see if you
knew what you were doing. It is evident you do."

The tall man drew himself up stiffly.

"You are not the first person to hint that I am on a crazy search,"
he said; "but I will show them --- I will show the world a wonder that
shall make me famous for all time."

Frank Merriwell was listening attentively, and he was curious to know
why Professor Bonner contemplated visiting the interior. It was evident
the man was not going on an exploring expedition, and he has stated he
was not going for the purpose of trading. He did not appear like a hunter
who was about to make the dangerous venture in search of big game, and
his language had revealed that he was going in search of something.

Captain Bellwood was not a little curious himself.

"Professor," he said, "you make me inquisitive --- I trust not impertinent.
Would you mind telling us why you are going inland amid savage tribes of
black men and ten thousand dangers of which you know nothing at all?"

"Ah --- ahem!" coughed the professor. "Of course I do not mind. In fact,
I came here to tell you, to see if you have not a man --- a faithful and
brave fellow --- you can spare me as a companion. I need such a companion."

The captain shook his head.

"I fear I cannot spare a man of my crew," he said.

"Wait," urged Bonner. "I may be able to make such a man famous. His
name will be printed in newspapers all over the world as the companion
of Professor Bonner, who made the most wonderful discovery ever known."

"My curiosity increases," admitted the captain. "Go on. What is the
object of your expedition?"

The professor took a roll of parchment from a little case, and spread
it out before the captain.

"See this," he directed. "This is a chart of the course I mean to follow,
and the unknown land I hope to reach. See this dotted line. It runs up
the Rembo, crosses the Oviguli, Louvendji, Agouyai, and other rivers; it
passes through the land of the Commi, Bakalai, Apono, Ashango, and other
tribes; it continues through the land of the Dwarfs; and here it comes
to a region that has never been explored by white men."

"All that is interesting; but why should you desire to make such a journey,
if not for exploration? Only a fool would think of going so far inland
to trade, and I do not take you for a fool, professor."

"Some do," said the tall man, dryly. "As I have said, that region right
there" --- indicating point on chart with his finger --- "has never been
explored by white men. A white man once reached its border, and that not
so very long ago. He had a photographic outfit with him, and he brought
back some remarkable pictures. I have one here. Look at it, captain."

He removed the photograph from a leather pocket, and placed on the chart
before Captain Bellwood.

"And yet it is not a gorilla --- exactly so. You see, it much more resembles
a hairy man, with a very short stump of a tail. It arms are not so long
as those of a gorilla, who walks on all fours, standing in a half upright
position. Its head is far better formed than that of a gorilla. The nose
is not so flat, the teeth less prominent, the ear better formed, and the
forehead higher. It is a creature of much greater intelligence than the
gorilla, and still it is not a man, as the stump of a tail clearly indicates."

"Well, well!" exclaimed Captain Bellwood. "I am growing strangely interested.
If this creature is not a gorilla and is not a man, what is it?"

"The Missing Link!"

"What?"

"This is the missing bond that unites man with the beasts!" cried Professor
Bonner, excitedly and confidently. "There is no doubt of it, sir."

"Oh, say! I can't take stock in that theory, for I do not believe in
evolution."

"You may not believe in evolution now, but you will in a very few years,
if you live so long. My dear captain, I am on one of the most momentous
expeditions ever attempted by a human being."

"You are going to penetrate this unknown land in search of this creature,
which you call the Missing Link?"

"Exactly. And I shall not return till I have captured or killed one
of these creatures. I do not wish to kill one, as it would be very much
like murder; but if I cannot capture one, the advancement of scientific
discovery and the broadening of human knowledge will nerve my hand to slay
one. Even though I felt myself a murderer, even though I might be regarded
as a murderer, I should consider it my duty to mankind to establish, beyond
the shadow of doubt, that there is such a creature as the Missing Link."

Frank Merriwell was feverishly interested. He longed to ask some questions,
but held himself silent in the presence of the captain and the professor.

Captain Bellwood was incredulous, as was plainly evident.

"How long ago was this picture taken, professor?" he asked.

"Not more than two years ago. I do not know the exact date when it was
taken, but it was about two years ago."

"By whom was it taken?"

"By Professor William Riding, of the University of Healdsburgh, a gentleman,
a scholar, a man of honor, and a man of veracity."

"How did he happen to be where he could obtain such a picture."

"He heard stories of this being --- sailors' stories. He even found
a sailor who professed to have penetrated the country where the creatures
are and have seen one of them. That aroused his curiosity. He found a wealthy
man who was willing to back him, and he organized an expedition to penetrate
to this land and bring back absolute proof of the existence of the Missing
Link. He carried out his project to a certain extent, for he reached the
country where the man monkeys are, and obtained this photograph. Then a
terrible misfortune befell him. He was wounded by a poison arrow, and he
never recovered, although he lived many months thereafter. His health failing,
he was forced to give over his project and return to his home. From his
own lips learned enough to satisfy me that the Missing Link is no myth.
When he died, I promised to complete the work he left unfinished, and here
I am. That is a full and complete explanation of how I happened to start
out on this expedition."

Frank saw the man was sincere and in earnest. Professor Bonner had not
a single doubt concerning the existence of the Missing Link.

"But this creature of which you have a picture may be no more than a
wild man --- an outcast from the natives near where he was discovered,"
said Captain Bellwood.

"Look at that!"

Bonner pointed triumphantly to the stubby tail exhibited in the photograph.

"That proves that the creature is not an ordinary wild man who has been
cast out from some of the savage tribes," declared the professor. "Now,
Captain Bellwood, I have made every arrangement for this expedition; but
desire the companionship and aid of at least one white man, and I have
come to see if you haven't a sailor who will accompany me --- a man you
can spare."

"I am sorry," said the master of the
Saucy Susan; "but I do not
feel I can spare a single man, professor. The crew ------"

"I there is none of the crew who can go, there is a passenger who will
accompany you, Professor Bonner," said Frank Merriwell, quietly.

Professor Bonner pursed up his lips, looked very much surprised, and shook
his head in a decidedly decisive manner.

"You?"

"Yes, sir."

"Why, you are a mere stripling."

Frank flushed a bit, but remained cool.

"I know I am young in years, but I have traveled some, and I have had
many experiences, passing through not a few dangers. I do not wish to boast,
but I will say that you might take many men who would not prove as valuable
as myself."

"Besides that," smiled Captain Bellwood, "if you take Mr. Merriwell,
you will constantly be in royal society. Mr. Merriwell was lately the king
of Wedolbas."

"The Wedolbas?" repeated Professor Bonner, questioningly. "Who are the
Wedolbas?"

The master of the Saucy Susan explained how the boy had been
wrecked on an island inhabited by cannibals and had saved himself and his
companions from being slain and devoured, making the cannibals believe
he has supernatural power, and thus becoming king in place of the former
monarch, who was killed by a stroke of lightning.

Professor Bonner gazed at the boy with increasing interest, which led
him to ask still further questions. In a short time he had learned enough
about Frank Merriwell to convince him that the youth was no ordinary "stripling."

"But how is it you are traveling around the world in such a manner?"
questioned the professor. "I should think your parents would not permit
it."

"My mother is dead," explained Frank, "and my father has not bothered
himself about me for a number of years. My uncle, who was very eccentric,
left me his fortune, and provided, in his will, that I should travel in
company with my guardian, in order to obtain a wider knowledge of the world."

"Hum!" grunted the professor. "But where is your guardian?"

"On his way to Europe by this time, I expect, if my last letter, which
was mailed at Buenos Ayres, reached him."

"And here you are in Africa. When and where do you expect to meet him?"

"I do not know, I shall write him at the first opportunity, and the
letter will be forwarded to my London bankers."

Bonner pursed his lips and whistled, canting his head to one side, and
regarding the boy in a manner that made Frank think of the herons he had
seen in Florida when they were watching something in the water near their
feet.

"A remarkable boy!" mumbled the professor --- "a most remarkable boy!
He has the air and bearing of a man of the world. I should much enjoy having
him as a companion."

Frank's heart gave a thump of satisfaction.

"Then take me along with you," he urged. "I'll guarantee that I will
not prove an incumbrance."

"My dear boy, you know nothing of the dangers we must encounter, the
perils of the forest and jungle, the wild beasts, the savage men, the venomous
reptiles, the dangers of fevers and strange diseases. No, my boy, I do
not think I dare take you."

Frank's heart sank in his bosom.

"I think you are making a mistake, professor," he said, with an air
of disappointment. "I know my age counts against me in your eyes; but still
I think you would take me along if you knew my guardian would not make
trouble about it.

"I might," was the confession.

"Well, I can assure you that professor Scotch ------"

"Professor who? cried Bonner. "Not Horace Scotch, of Fardale?"

"Exactly. Professor Horace Scotch is my guardian."

"Why we were boys together --- schoolmates!" cried the scientist. "I
have not seen Hoddy for years; but I have not forgotten him. And he is
your guardian? Well, well, well!"

Frank fancied he saw an opportunity to gain the object he so much desired,
and he worked for it with a will. He explained that Professor Scotch was
more a companion than a guardian, that the professor seldom or never objected
to anything Frank wished to do, that he had been travelling alone since
his sudden expedition into South America, and that Scotch would be delighted
to know that his protégé was in such excellent company
as his old comrade and schoolmate, Johnson Bonner.

The boy had played his cards skilfully, and Professor Bonner finally
succumbed, after appealing to Captain Bellwood, who was forced to acknowledge
that he believed the lad would be a most valuable and trustworthy companion.

"All right," said the scientist, "I start to-morrow morning as early
as possible, and you must be on hand. I am stopping at the upper village,
which you have not yet visited, and it would be well for you to come up
this afternoon and talk matters over with me. Will you come?"

Frank agreed to come, and the professor finally took his leave, his
last words being an expression of doubt as to the wisdom of taking a boy
along.

When Frank told Ephraim Gallup that he was going with Professor Bonner,
the boy from Vermont quietly observed:

"Gol derned ef I ain't goin' too. Yeou can't lose me Frank."

Frank spoke of the dangers and hardships; but Ephraim was not disturbed
in the least.

"What yeou s'pose I keer fer them things!" he cried. "I may kick up
some, an' say I wish I was to hum; but yeou'd oughter know I kin fight
when I hev to, an' kin stand some knockin' araound. I tell yeou I am goin'
along."

"Perhaps Professor Bonner will not have you."

"He'll have to have me, by gum! I'll jest go along, anyway."

So Ephraim accompanied Frank when the latter visited the Professor at
the upper village that afternoon.

Professor Bonner objected vigorously to taking two boys; but Frank told
some "large yarns" about Ephraim's ability and bravery, and the man finally
gave in.

The professor had a large stock of goods, all of which were made into
bundles for carrying, but were to be transported in boats as far as possible.

He explained that he should take twenty boatmen and porters from the
Commi people, among whom he was stopping. The Commi could be depended upon,
being brave and hardy, and comparatively honest. Some of the tribes inland
were noted for their treachery and dishonesty.

The professor had taken care to provide himself with the most modern
weapons, revolvers and magazine rifles. He was able to supply Frank and
Ephraim with such weapons.

"It is very likely we may have to do some fighting," he said. 'Some
of the inland tribes will not let us pass without trouble, that is pretty
sure."

"Can you shoot, professor?" asked Frank.

"Well, I know how to fire a rifle, but I am no great marksman. How about
yourself?"

Frank picked up one of the handsome Winchester rifles.

"See the bright-colored bird on the very tip of yonder tree?" he asked.

"Yes, I see the bird. It is scarcely possible you fancy you can touch
it at such a distance."

Frank made no reply, but brought the rifle to his shoulder, took swift
but accurate aim, and fired.

There was an exploding puff of bright-colored feathers, and the bird,
shattered by the bullet, fell from the tree.

"Good gracious!" gasped Professor Bonner, in a dazed way. "It is really
marvelous --- if it was not an accident."

"Wal, it wa'n't no accident," said Ephraim Gallup. "An' that ain't northin'
side of the shootin' I've seen him do"

Some of the natives had seen the shot, and they uttered loud cries of
astonishment and admiration. Frank was regarded as a great wizard, and
the chief of the village immediately sent to him to see his "fetich," [sic]
or charm.

In Africa every native has a fetich. Some are to prevent sickness, some
to protect from wizards, some to make the owners great hunters, or for
hundreds of other things.

The fetiches are made from all sorts of things, such as birds' claws,
monkey's teeth, hair, snake skins, human bones, and so forth.

Frank and Ephraim finally returned to the Saucy Susan and made
ready for the expedition.

When Frank met Elsie he found the girl very sad and dejected.

"Cheer up, little sweetheart," smiles the light-hearted lad. "You are
looking as if you did not expect ever to see me again."

"I fear I never shall," she said, gloomily. "You are going into a land
of fevers and unknown diseases, to say nothing of other perils. Oh! Frank,
why do you go? I was so happy, thinking you would remain with us for some
time!"

"You know I am determined to see all the world I can, Elsie; and I shall
not find another opportunity like this. Besides that, just think what it
means if it should be true that the Missing Link has been discovered in
the wilds of Africa --- if we should capture one of the creatures and bring
it out alive. It would make us all famous the world over,"

"What is fame, Frank! Life, health, and happiness are far preferable.
For my sake, won't you give up this foolish expedition, Frank?"

Frank was placed in an unpleasant and embarrassing position. It took
him some time to convince Elsie that she was asking too much of him, but
he finally succeeded, and she gave up.

But they were together a long time, and Captain Bellwood did not interrupt
their love making.

Frank and Ephraim were on hand early in the morning for the start, which
Profes[s]or Bonner had anticipated would be made at sunrise.

But the professor was not yet familiar with the ways of the black people.
Before the start could be made there were speech-making, farewells, and
strange ceremonies. And when these things had been gone through and everything
seemed ready for the start, the twenty natives who were to accompany the
professor had to rush back and all go through it again.

All this took much time, and the sun was well up before the start was
made. At last the boats were off. The throng of blacks on the shore fired
a salute from their guns and yelled like maniacs; the blacks in the boats
fired a salute in response and yelled like fiends.

"Gol dern my skin ef I ever saw such a passel of yee-haw critters!"
exclaimed Ephraim. "They kin make more noise than a menagerie uv wildcats."

"They certainly seem to have good lungs," laughed Frank.

Up the Fernand Vas they paddled, and, at nightfall, they camped near
where the Rembo emptied into the larger river.

Frank never forgot that first night camp. Several fires were built,
and brush houses were hastily constructed. After supper the Commi men sat
around the fires and smoked and jabbered, the firelight flaring on their
black skins, their eyes rolling, their white teeth showing, and their arms
being flung about in strange gestures. They were telling hunting yarns,
and it seemed that each one was striving to tell a more improbable lie
than any of the others.

Frank and Ephraim lay on some blankets and watched the singular scene,
while Professor Bonner sat near one of the fires, writing in his journal,
making a record of the first day's journey.

"Well, Ephraim," said Frank, "here we are well started on the most remarkable
search ever undertaken by human beings."

"That's so, Frank," nodded the Vermonter. "I be gol derned ef it don't
seem like I was dreamin' all this."

"It is no dream; but it is a strange reality."

"Nobody'd ever thought that I'd be here. Folks up in aour taown never
suspected me nor Hiram, my brother'd, 'mount to much; but Hi he went to
Chilly, where he's making money hand over fist, an' I'm travelin' araound
the world."

"You are traveling around the world, even though you sometimes wish
you were back home on the farm."

"Wal," said Ephraim, a bit sheepishly, "anybody's kainder wish they
was to hum ef they was captured by cannibals as was jest goin' to eat 'em
up. Ef it hedn't bin for yeou, Frank, the cannibuls'd made a meal off me
sure as hens lays aigs."

"There are cannibals in Africa."

"Git aout!"

"Lots of them. The Fans are said to eat people who die of natural causes."

"Oh, the gol dern critters! It can't be they know anything a tall."

"On the contrary, they are said to be one of the finest and most intelligent
appearing races in Africa. They are splendidly built, both men and women,
are skilled workers in iron, make the finest spears, knives, axes, and
other implements, and are brave and warlike."

"It is possible that the Fans were not cannibals originally, but were
driven to eat human flesh from necessity during some time of famine. In
that way the habit came upon them. They do not eat their own people who
die of diseases, but exchange them for others."

"Haow in thinder is that yeou alwus know so much abaout every place
where yeou go?" asked the boy from Vermont, wonderingly.

Frank smiled.

"That is easy. I make it a practice to obtain all the information possible
about the countries I mean to visit, so that when I get back home I shall
really know something of the world."

"That's a great idee."

"In this way, I feel I am carrying out the design of my uncle Asher,
who provided by his will that I should travel in order to broaden my knowledge
of the world and humanity."

"Haow'd you find aout so much about this part of Afriky? Yeou didn't
know for sure yeou was goin' to visit this coast till we was taken off
Phantom Island by Cap'n Bellwood."

"Captain Bellwood is a man who believes in knowing something of the
people with whom he intends to do business, and he has a number of authentic
books on Africa and its inhabitants."

"An' yeou was readin' uv 'em ev'ry day, I remember that. Wal, Frank,
you're baound to be a great man some time. Yeou'll know a heap."

"It is not absolutely necessary to travel in order to become well informed
concerning the world and its inhabitants, Any boy who has the ambition
may acquire a vast store of knowledge by reading books of travel, and well-written
books of travel are as fascinating as novels.

"By gum! I'm goin' to read more uv that kind uv stuff arter this. I
don't expect to travel all over the world, same as yeou will; but what
I have traveled makes me want to know moare abaout the world than I do.
At the same time, I don't care much abaout havin' anything to do with no
more cannibuls."

"Well, you are not likely to, for we pass to the south of the Fan country,
so we shall not see the cannibals. But we are going through a country inhabited
by people far more dangerous that cannibals,"

"Git aout!"

"That is right."

"Who be they?"

"The Bakalai."

"What's the matter with them?"

"They are very treacherous and untrustworthy."

"Is that all?"

"No. At the very moment when they appear the most friendly they may
be plotting to murder one. And they use poisoned arrows,"

"Wal, dern their skins!"

"The heads of the arrows are so attached to the shaft that, if the arrow
penetrates beyond the barbed head, an attempt to pull it out will leave
the poisoned head in the wound."

"By what yeou say abaout them, I should judge the Bakalai are real nice
people! They'd oughter go to war with the cannibuls, an' both sides fight
till everybody was killed dead."

The boys lay and talked till they became drowsy, and they finally wrapped
themselves in their blankets and slept.

Some time in the night they were aroused by the frightful screech of
a leopard; but the natives hastily stirred up the fires and the creature
did not approach the camp.

The next morning they pushed on up the Rembo, which was rather narrow
and swift where it emptied into the Fernand Vaz, but became broader and
easier to navigate as they progressed,

On both sides of the river the foliage was like a dense green wall,
dotted here and there with bright flowers. Bright-plumed birds cut the
air overhead, monkeys chattered in the trees, crocodiles slipped into the
water from muddy banks on which they had been sunning themselves, and once
some elephants that had been near the river took to their heels and disappeared
amid the trees, which crashed and swayed as they went.

Frank caught up his rifle and fired after the elephants, but the creatures
were out of sight before he could get a shot, so he had to fire by chance,
and it seemed that he did not wound one of the creatures.

Both boys were kept constantly interested and on the alert by what they
both saw about them. Everything seemed novel and strange, and the day passed
swiftly.

Near night the boats approached Goumbi, a large village. One of the
smaller boats was sent forward, so the inhabitants of the town might be
notified that three white men were coming to visit them.

When Goumbi was approached all the inhabitants of the village were on
the shore to welcome the white men. They danced, shouted, sang, and fired
guns.

"Gol dern the critters!" muttered Ephraim, clutching his rifle. "They
act like they was itchin' to chaw us up."

"That is their way of greeting us," explained Professor Bonner, "They
expect me to stay with them some time and trade, and they will be greatly
disappointed when they learn I mean to go on in the morning."

As the boats approached the shore, Frank stood up, pointed his Winchester
into the air, and fired six shots in bewilderingly rapid succession.

The natives were astounded and frightened. All their guns were old fashioned
muzzle loaders, and they had never seen a repeating rifle. It seemed marvelous
to them that a gun could shoot so many times without reloading, and some
of them ran away and concealed themselves, fearing the "white wizards"
too much to face them.

The king, though greatly agitated, greeted the professor and the boys,
saying he was glad they had come, and making them presents of goats and
plantains.

Professor Bonner made a brief speech, in which he assured the king that
he had come to do him good, and ended by making the old fellow a present
of a bright-red jacket, which the king immediately donned, grinning with
delight and dancing about like a jubilant schoolboy.

A house was given the professor and the boys for their occupancy while
they remained in the village. The professor took care that his good were
stowed away for the night and carefully guarded.

Later on there was a great pow-wow, in which the villagers and the three
white visitors took part.

The professor presented the king's ten wives each with a string of bright-colored
beads, and explained that he had not come to trade, but was going inland
to hunt.

This was something the natives could not understand, and they appeared
to doubt the white man's word.

At last the professor was forced to show his photograph of the "Missing
Link" to the chief, and explain that he was going in search of that creature,
hoping to capture one alive, and take it to the white man's country, where
he could make much money exhibiting it.

The king was finally forced to be satisfied with Bonner's statements,
but he professed great grief over the short stay the whites were to make
with him.

The inhabitants of Goumbi told frightful tales of the great perils to
be encountered farther on, plainly striving to frighten the party from
proceeding, but Bonner laughed at all these yarns, and insisted that he
should go forward in the morning.

That night Frank slept soundly, but, despite the heaviness of his slumber,
he was aroused by a cry that seemed to come from the river. He started
up and listened.

All seemed silent, save for the snoring of Ephraim and the professor,
who slept on without a break.

Somehow that cry had stirred the blood in Frank's body. He rose and
went out where he could listen without hearing the snoring so plainly.

As he reached the open air, another cry, broken and smothered, coming
from a far distance, was indistinctly heard.

It seemed like the call of a woman in distress, and it affected the
boy strangely, even though he had heard of wild beasts that uttered such
weird sounds.

He crept back into the hut, a heavy chill upon him. Although he lay
down and closed his eyes, his sleep was no longer peaceful and refreshing.
All through the rest of the night he dreamed of Elsie --- dreamed she was
in some frightful peril.

When morning came the king still objected to the departure of the expedition,
but finally agreed to let the party go on if Professor Banner would pay
a certain price in cloth and beads.

The professor was angry. He ordered his men to make ready to start without
delay, and, when the king ordered out his fighting men and offered to prevent
this, the professor threatened him with disaster and ruin.

But Frank Merriwell took a far more effective way to induce the old
monarch to let them depart. He promptly leveled his rifle at the king's
head, threatening to shoot if the warriors were not ordered off at once.

The king had seen Frank fire six shots from the rifle without pausing
to reload, and he stood in great awe of the weapon. He showed fear immediately,
and did as the boy directed.

"You are wise," said the cool lad. "If I should start this gun to shooting
it might not stop till yourself and all your people were dead."

Frank kept the king under surveillance till the expedition was ready
to move. As the boats were paddled up the river, the king cried out to
the Commi men of the professor's party that the white boy's gun held a
bad spirit that would kill them all.

But the coast savages had seen a repeating rifle before, and they simply
laughed.

This day was much like the previous day, except that the party halted
by mid-afternoon and prepared an encampment for the night.

By this time the natives declared they were in a region where the gorilla
might be found, and Frank was very anxious to kill one of the creatures.

Ever full of restless energy, Frank proposed a hunt, and Ephraim seconded
the proposal.

The professor tried to dissuade them; but he had come to regard Frank
with respect, and he did not say much.

Frank's coolness and prompt action in dealing with the old king who
had tried to make them pay heavy tribute for the privilege of going onward
from his village had convinced Bonner that they boy knew his business and
could be relied upon.

The professor had praised Frank for this act, and had been not a little
surprised when he found the lad regarded it as of small consequence.

Mpomo, a Commi hunter, agreed to accompany the boys, and they selected
two other natives.

The forest back from the river was thick and dark, with very large trees,
the branches of which were intertwined.

Mpomo declared it was a fine place for gorillas, who shun light, open
places at day, and hover in dark, secluded nooks.

The boy had heard many stories of the gorilla's strength and ferocity
since leaving the Saucy Susan. With the exception of the hunters,
the natives stood greatly in awe of the beast.

It was plain, also, that some of the hunters were no so eager to face
a gorilla as they professed to be.

Mpomo, however, seemed a rather brave and nervy fellow, and Frank was
favorably impressed by his appearance.

The young Commi hunter led the way, Frank and Ephraim following, with
the other Commi men bringing up the rear.

In this manner they pushed forward for at least a mile without seeing
anything worth shooting.

Frank was surprised and disappointed, for he had expected to find the
forest abounding with game, there being so much life along the river.

At length they came to a little strip of prairie right in the heart
of the great forest. The grass was green and the natural clearing looked
very pretty in the midst of the dark woods.

They were crossing this open space when all were startled by a blood-curdling
scream and a bellowing roar.

A moment later a wild bull, with a leopard clinging to its back, came
tearing across the clearing.

The leopard had fastened its teeth in the bull's neck, and was clinging
with its cruel claws to the back of the agonized animal.

The bull bounded and reared, tossed and plunged, but all in vain for
the leopard clung with the tenacity of death itself.

The bull would dart forward a short distance, stop abruptly, wheel and
whirl, but all to no avail.

The was a wild light of despair in the buffalo's eyes and a wild light
of savage triumph in the eyes of the leopard.

It was a thrilling spectacle, and the boys watched it with breathless
interest, forgetting their rifles were in their hands.

The bull was so blinded by pain and terror that it saw nothing of the
hunters.

Of a sudden it dashed straight at Ephraim, and the leopard seemed to
become aware the human beings were present.

In wild excitement, Ephraim flung up his rifle and fired.

It was a chance shot, but a deadly one, for the bull dropped in a second,
the bullet having reached its brain.

At the very moment that the bull fell, the leopard seemed to launch
itself into the air, leaping straight at the boy from Vermont.

Ephraim could not have escaped by any effort of his own. He stood with
his smoking rifle half-lowered, utterly incapable of making a move to defend
himself.

In watching the struggle between the bull and the leopard, Frank had
stepped several feet to one side. His rifle was at his shoulder when Ephraim
fired.

Frank saw the buffalo fall, and comprehended the deadly danger to his
friend.

Never was Frank Merriwell's hand steadier than at that moment, never
was his aim truer and more deadly.

Spang! --- the rifle spat forth its deadly pellet.

The leaping leopard seemed to double into a ball in the air, and it
dropped in a heap at Ephraim's feet, feebly clawing at the ground, a bullet
through its body.

Ephraim jumped back, gasping:

"Wal, by gum!"

A great shout went up from the throats of the natives. They were filled
with astonishment and admiration. Mpomo screamed:

"White boy big quick kill! Sure he have wizard spirit in his gun! Him
very big hunter! Hoolray! hoolray!"

Both lads were regarded with unutterable admiration by the amazed savages,
who danced with glee about the slain animals.

"Gol dern my skin!" gurgled Ephraim. "But that was a thunderin' close
call! My gun kainder went off by accident, but it killed the kaow. I don't
reckon yeour gun went off by accident, Frank. That was great shootin'."

"Well, I didn't have any time to spare." laughed Frank.

"Not a jiffy. Ef yeou'd stopped to think it over, that air leopard would
hev hed a square meal off me, sure's shootin'."

The natives fell to skinning the leopard.

"I shall keep this skin among my trophies," smiled Frank. "Whenever
I see it I shall think of you, Ephraim."

The black fellow were very skilful in their work, and it took them but
a few minutes to strip the hide from the leopard. Then they set about skinning
and cutting up the buffalo.

One of them started out at a run to the camp to notify the Commi men
to come and bring in the meat.

"I rather fancy this ends our hunting for this afternoon," said Frank.
"We did not find a gorilla, but we found some game."

"That's right, an' it's purty big game, too."

"I am satisfied with the result of the hunt."

"An' I'm satisfied so long's I escaped from bein' chawed up. I don't
keer ef we don't see no gorilla, fer ------"

Ephraim was interrupted by a sound like distant thunder. It rumbled
and rolled through the forest, almost seeming to make the ground quiver.

Mpomo took the lead, quickly plunging into the forest which surrounded
the glade, Frank and Ephraim followed him closely, leaving the other hunter
to look after the buffalo and leopard until they returned or the people
from the camp came.

Mpomo moved forward with great swiftness and silence, taxing the energies
of the boys to follow him. It was not long before Ephraim began to breathe
heavily, but Frank, being a perfect athlete, kept his "wind" splendidly.

For at least a mile the black guide led them forward through the dismal
forest, and the boys were beginning to feel certain he had come too far
when he suddenly halted, whispering:

"Now go claucious. Him berry near here when him holler."

"How do you know?" asked Frank.

"Know by sound."

"It does not seem possible he could have been so far away and we could
hear his roar so plainly."

"By gosh," gasped Ephraim, "I'd hate to have him holler in my ear! It's
bu'st a feller's head wide open."

"Must be still," warned the native hunter. "Him may be near. Mebbe him
run away if him hear little stick break. Look out berry close where feet
step."

They crept onward through the woods.

All at once, with a low, clucking noise, Mpomo stopped.

The boys half lifted their rifles, ready for action; but the hunter
bent over the ground, a murmur of satisfaction coming from his lips.

They stepped forward and looked at the soft, moist ground where he was
pointing, and there they saw a huge footprint that set the blood to leaping
in their veins, for it was the track of a gorilla beyond a doubt.

There was the broad foot plainly impressed, with the thumb-like big
toes standing out from the others. It was an imprint to fill the beholder
with awe, for it showed that the beast must be a monster of its kind.

Ephraim Gallup's teeth chattered.

"Gig-gug-gug-great-gosh!" he stammered. "He must be the old he-daddy
uv all gug-gug-gug- gorillas!"

"Him pretty big," nodded Mpomo. "Bad feller to fool with."

"I ain't feelin' very well," declared the lad from Vermont. "I guess
we'd better go right back to the river."

Frank paid no attention to this, but said to Mpomo:

"Follow the trail, we'll follow you."

"Be still," warned the hunter. "Reddy to fire. Come."

Crouching, his eyes rolling, his figure reminding Frank of a creeping
panther, the black hunter moved onward.

The white boys followed, although Ephraim's teeth still chattered.

They had not proceeded far before they came to a place where the underbrush
was thick, and where, in order to clear a road for his progress, the gorilla
had torn up the bushes, snapped great limbs as thick as a man's arm, and
even pulled up young trees by the roots.

"Gosh! but he must have some muscle!" whispered Ephraim, admiration
mingling with his fear. "He's be a holy terror to rassle with."

They followed the gorilla's trail through the underbrush, and then,
in a little clearing, they suddenly came upon a startling and horrible
spectacle.

A dead man lay upon the ground, his body ripped open from his breastbone
downward. Beside him was a gun, the barrel of which was bent and twisted,
showing what enormous strength the enraged gorilla possessed.

It was plain that the man had come suddenly and unexpectedly upon the
gorilla, had fired hastily, had failed to mortally wound the beast, and
the creature had closed in instantly, killing the man with one blow, after
which he seized and twisted the gun.

A shout of the utmost wonder and dismay escaped Frank Merriwell's lips
as he saw the dead man on the ground.

"Look!" he cried, pointing a shaking finger at the body. "It is a white
man!"

"Great gosh!" fluttered Ephraim, his eyes popping from his head. "It
is a white man, sure as punkins make good pies!"

Frank advanced a few steps, scanning the face of the dead man, which
was convulsed with agony and terror.

"A sailor, I should say," muttered Frank. "And there seems something
familiar about him, as if I had seen him before."

The next moment he fell back, hoarsely crying:

"Merciful goodness! I have seen him before! I know the man!"

"What's that? what's that?" spluttered Ephraim. "Know him!"

"Yes. Look --- look at that face! You have seen him before --- you know
him. There can be no mistake."

"By gum! I believe I do!"

"Of course you do. The man's name is Ostergoth, and he is a Swede. He
was a sailor on the ------"

"On the Saucy Susan!"

"Sure as fate!"

The boys looked into each other's eyes in growing amazement, utterly
unable to understand this wonder.

"Haow in thunder kin that be?" asked Ephraim. "We left Ostergoth on
the Saucy Susan when we came away from her."

"That's what we did," nodded Frank; "but the man is here at our feet,
dead as a door-nail."

"There must be some kind uv a mistake. This feller must look like the
Swede, but it can't be him."

"There is no mistake," declared Frank, bending over the man and lifting
his arm, from which he thrust the sleeve back. "Ostergoth has a vessel
tattooed on his left arm right here, and here it is! This is the man!"

"But haow did he come here, when we left him on the schooner?"

"Ask me something easy."

"He must have deserted."

"That's plain; but I do not understand how he got so far inland in such
a short time. It is a marvel."

The wonder of the boys increased as they thought the matter over. The
Swede had been left behind them on the schooner, and now here he was, far
from the coast, dead in the gloomy wilds of the African forest.

"If he deserted the vessel, he did not desert alone," declared Frank.
No man would leave a vessel on this coast and hurry inland among the savages."

"Perhaps he was sent arter us," suggested Ephraim.

Frank shook his head.

"That is not at all likely. I he had been sent after us, he would have
found us. Instead of that, he must have made special effort to avoid us
and get ahead of us."

"Mebbe he was makin' a rush to find the Missin' Link afore we did."

Frank thought of the strange cry he had heard in the night --- the cry
that had brought him from the hut in the village of Goumbi to listen in
the street.

Of a sudden, Mpomo gave a cry, pointing excitedly at the ground.

"Look dat!" he exclaimed.

"They looked, and what they beheld was more astonishing than anything
they had yet seen.

It was another footprint. It was small and shapely, being the footprint
of a female.

"That is nonsense. Don't be foolish, Mpomo. We must find that gorilla,
and save the white woman who is in peril. Lead on."

Mpomo protested, growing still more frightened. Frank became angry after
a time, and he suddenly drew a revolver and thrust it against the hunter's
head, sternly saying:

"You must follow that gorilla, or we'll leave you here on the ground,
a dead Commi man. Start!"

"An' be gol' dern lively abaout startin'," growled Ephraim.

Through fear of the revolver Mpomo went forward, but it was plain that
he could not be depended on in case they came suddenly upon the gorilla.

They had not proceeded far before a moaning cry of fear sounded through
the forest --- the cry of a girl in dire distress.

That sent the blood like molten lava through Frank Merriwell's veins.

Following the moaning cry came shriek after shriek, terrible, intense,
despairing.

And then sounded that rumbling roar, a sound that was horrible beyond
description. It was like rolling thunder, and yet it had the mingled note
of a human being and a beast in fury. It seemed to fill all the forest
and to make the leaves on the trees quiver.

Mpomo fell flat on his face, utterly overcome with terror. Frank and
Ephraim were rooted to the ground for a moment, but, as soon as the sounds
ceased, Frank whirled and clutched his companion, giving the boy from Vermont
a savage shake.

"It's the gorilla!" he panted. "He has pursued her --- he has found
her! We must save her --- or die!"

Ephraim's teeth had been rattling together, but he braced up wonderfully,
returning:

Forward they went at a run, paying no heed to Mpomo, who still lay face
downward on the ground, as if he had been death stricken.

In a few minutes they broke through into an open space amid the trees,
and were just in time to see a huge, hairy creature disappear into the
shadows at the farther side.

"Did you see him?" panted Frank.

"Yep," answered Ephraim, staring about. "But where's the gal?"

"He had her --- had her in his arms! Come on! Be ready to shoot, but
take care not to shoot her."

After the gorilla they rushed, heedless, reckless, desperate. The shadows
were deep beneath the trees, but they did not mind. The chivalry of their
natures was aroused, and they would have dared anything just then.

They looked around, expecting to see the monster near at hand; but the
brute had vanished in a most singular manner. They were about to push onward
when they were startled by a cry:

"Frank --- save me!"

It came from above. Looking upward, Frank Merriwell beheld a spectacle
that seemed to turn his seething blood to ice- water.

A monster gorilla, nearly six feet in height, with immense body, huge
chest, long, muscular arms, fiercely glaring large deep-gray eyes, and
a fiendish expression of face, like some frightful nightmare vision, was
clinging amid the stout branches of a large tree. With one arm this monster
of the African forest held to its hairy breast a girl --- a white girl
--- Elsie Bellwood!

Frank's worst fears were confirmed. He had hoped and prayed that it
might not be Elsie; but now he knew the girl who was so dear to him was
in this frightful peril. How she came there, so far from her father's vessel,
he could not conceive, and there was no time for speculation on that point.
She must be rescued without delay.

The crest of short hair which stood on the gorilla's forehead began
to twitch up and down, while the monster showed his powerful fangs, making
Frank think of the dreadful creatures, half human and half beast, which
he had seen in pictures of the infernal regions.

Although the gorilla did not seem to fear the boys, it held the girl
between itself and them, glaring over her shoulder, thus seeming to protect
itself from their bullets.

Ephraim Gallup had been chattering with terror, but now, of a sudden,
he found himself wonderfully cool and deliberate. His hand fell on Frank's
arm, and he asked:

"Haow be we goin' to save her?"

"If we could shoot the beast --- if we could kill it --- if ------"

"That gol derned 'if' is a nasty word. Ef we shoot, we may hit her.
Ef we don't hit her, we may not kill the gorilla, an' he may take a noshun
ter serve her ther way he did Ostergoth."

Frank knew this was true. The first bullet must be deadly, or the imperiled
girl might be rent limb from limb by the wounded monster.

The situation was one to rob the strongest man of his nerve, but Frank
Merriwell did not loose his head.

"Get under the tree, Ephraim," he directed. "Prepare to catch her when
I fire. Move lively now!"

"But you're not goin' to shoot? Yeou'll hit her!"

"Do as I tell you," came sternly from Frank. "It is the only way to
save her. Get under that limb."

Ephraim lost no more time in putting down his rifle and doing as he
was directed. He placed himself directly beneath the huge limb on which
the gorilla was standing, bracing himself to catch the girl if she dropped.

Then the other lad lifted his rifle and took careful aim at the right
eye of the gorilla, which was seen over the girl's shoulder.

Never was Frank's hand steadier than at that moment. The rifle seemed
held in a vise.

The gorilla seemed to wonder what was about to take place.

"Be still Elsie," warned Frank, in a calm voice. "I will shoot the brute
through the head."

A scream broke from the lips of the unfortunate girl, and the rifle fell
from Frank Merriwell's hands, while he groaned:

"Merciful Heaven! I have hit her!"

But even as his lips uttered the words two forms came tumbling from
the tree, one of them with a flutter of garments, the other, hairy and
horrible, turning over and over in the air.

Ephraim Gallup, true to his trust, caught the girl. Then he leaped aside
to avoid the gorilla, which had struck close to him upon the ground, and
was tearing up the earth in its frightful death struggles.

Frank Merriwell sprang forward and literally tore the girl from the
arms of his friend. He gazed wildly into her face, palpitating:

"Elsie, little sweetheart, have I harmed you! If I have, I'll never
forgive myself! Speak to me, Elsie.

Her eyes were closed and her face was deathly white. A chill struck
through Frank's heart like the keen blade of a knife.

"Speak, Elsie," he hoarsely whispered. "Open your eyes!"

The he kissed her unresponding lips, lowering her gently to the ground,
an expression of unutterable anguish on his handsome face.

"Wal, I don't see no blood on her. Yeou never touched her at all. But
yeou did shute the derned gorilla clean through ther coco. Ther gal's fainted."

"Fainted?"

"That's all."

Frank was on his knees at her side, chafing her hands and gazing earnestly
into her face. For all that she was so pale, for all that her clothes were
torn and her hair tangled, she had never looked prettier than at that moment.
She was like a rumpled doll.

The gorilla lay quite still where it had fallen, its struggles having
ceased. Ephraim went over and gave the creature a savage kick, crying:

"There, gol dern ye! try to kerry off another gal, will ye! I'll be
a good Durham kaow yeou don't!"

Having relieved his feelings in this manner, he again turned his attention
to Frank and Elsie.

"She'' come raound all right bum-by, Frank," he said. "Don't yeou worry
abaout that. Ef we hed some water, ur a little uv the professor's whisky,
we could bring her raound right off; but I kinder guess it'll be all right
ef she takes her time."

Frank had satisfied himself that Elsie was not injured at all by the
bullet, but still he was filled with unutterable anxiety. He hovered over
her, rubbing her hands and calling her name, till her eyelids began to
flutter, a deep sigh passed her lips, and she finally murmured:

"Frank!"

"Elsie!"

Once more he had her in his arms, looking wildly into her face. She
opened her eyes, saw his face so near, and smiled faintly.

"Frank, you saved me!"

"Yes, thank Heaven! I was able to save you, little sweetheart! I feared
I had killed you when you cried out; but my bullet went true, and the gorilla
is dead."

She shuddered.

"Oh, the dreadful beast!" she half sobbed. "I ran as long as I had strength,
and then I hid; but the great, hairy creature found me. Oh, it was horrible,
horrible!"

She seemed overcome by the remembrance, shuddering and sobbing. Frank
held her close to his heart, trying to calm her.

"Guess he'll git along all right ef I don't help him," said the boy
from Vermont, turning away and winking at nothing in particular.

Ephraim pretended to be very busy in examining the dead gorilla during
the next ten minutes, and he would have spent a longer time in this manner
if Frank had not spoken to him.

"Wal, I guess she's all right now," said the Yankee boy, as he sauntered
over to the young couple.

"I am, thanks to you both," said Elsie, holding out her hand to him.
"I owe you a thousand thanks."

"Wal, by gosh! there ain't many boys uv yeour age that kin-say they
have shot a real live gorilla."

"There's not another boy in the whole world like Frank Merriwell!" declared
Elsie, proudly. "He is the most wonderful boy who ever lived --- the bravest
and the noblest!"

Frank blushed.

"Oh, come, Elsie!" he protested; "don't lay it on so thick! I can't
stand it --- really I can't. You don't know all the boys in the world,
and so you are not competent to judge."

Although Frank Merriwell possessed a certain amount of self-esteem,
he was not conceited; he did not think himself the smartest fellow in the
world, which is rather remarkable considering the fortune that had befallen
him and the adventures through which he had passed. Most lads in Frank's
shoes would have been spoiled; but, instead of getting the "big head,"
Frank was learning each day how insignificant one human being really is,
and he knew the world would jog along very well if he were to suddenly
drop out of existence.

The adventure through which Elsie had passed had severely shaken her
nerves, and had robbed her of her strength. Both lads were eager to know
how she came to be there in the forest, far from the Saucy Susan,
but, understanding the state of mind she was in, they refrained from questioning
her then.

Supporting her between them, and leaving the dead gorilla to be found
and brought in by some of the natives, they started for the camp.

When the camp was reached Captain Bellwood and several sailors were found
there. The captain was nearly distracted, and the sight of his child, alive
and practically uninjured, filled him with unutterable joy. He clasped
her in his arms, and actually shed tears of happiness.

When the old salt learned that Elsie had been rescued by Frank and Ephraim,
who had saved her from the clutches of a gorilla, when he heard how Frank
had shot the monarch of the African forest through the head, although forced
to take chances of hitting the girl with the bullet, Justin Bellwood regarded
both lads with unspeakable admiration.

The master of the Saucy Susan wrung Ephraim's hand warmly, but
he deliberately embraced Frank, his voice far from steady, as he said:

"My little girl has said you are the most wonderful boy in the whole
world, and I am beginning to believe she is right. Frank Merriwell, I owe
you a mighty debt --- a debt I can never pay. Anything and everything I
may possess is yours. All you have to do is ask."

The eyes of Frank and Elsie met for a single instant, and the girl's
lashes drooped, while a warm flood of color rushed to the cheeks that had
been so pale a while before.

"Thank you, Captain Bellwood," said Frank, quietly, gravely. "It makes
me happy to know you feel thus towards me. Still, I do not want too much
credit. Ephraim stood by me through it all, and he caught Elsie when she
fell, after I shot the gorilla.

"Oh, that wan't northin' at all," spluttered the Vermonter, awkwardly.
"Anybody could have done that. But it did take a feller with haydoogins
uv nerve ter shute ther gorilla an' not hit the little gal."

"Well, well, well!" cried Professor Bonner, who had heard all that passed.
"And to think I hesitated about taking such boys as companions! Remarkable
lads. Wonderful youths! I am proud --- proud, sir! --- to have them with
me.

Frank was restless and longed to get away, as all this praise and admiration
were far from agreeable to him. However, he had not heard how it happened
that Elsie was there, and, by way of turning the tide of conversation,
he asked that the matter be explained.

Then Captain Bellwood told how there had been trouble brewing among
the sailors for some time, and how it had been necessary to put the irons
on Ostergoth and confine him to the hold. The Swede had sworn to have revenge,
and had awaited his time.

Another sailor, Bob Buntline, a restless and quarrelsome fellow, had
expressed his hatred for Captain Bellwood, and the two had plotted to strike
a blow at the master of the Saucy Susan.

The very day that Frank and Ephraim started up the river with Professor
Bonner the captain had gone ashore, permitting Elsie to accompany him for
the first time.

While the captain was trading in the village, the girl had left him
for a few moments. When he came back to look for her she could not be found.

Of course an alarm was raised immediately. Elsie had disappeared most
mysteriously, and it was some time before the captain could learn anything
of her.

At last he found that Ostergoth, Buntline, and another fellow by the
name of Bill Jones were missing.

A little later it was discovered that certain natives had disappeared
from the village.

Then Captain Bellwood became convinced of treachery; but it was not
easy to track the kidnappers and their native allies. After a time he found
they had proceeded up the river, and he organized an expedition to follow.

Elsie had been lured from her father's side by Bill Jones, whom she
did not suspect of treachery. Professing to have something very wonderful
to show her, Jones had enticed her away, a blanket had been cast over her
head, and she had been dragged into the forest by Jones, Buntline, and
Ostergoth.

The three ruffians had lost no time in getting away. They had hired
some natives to furnish a boat and accompany them, after which they had
blackened their faces and bodies, had dressed like natives as far as possible,
had placed the bound and gagged girl in the bottom of the boat, and had
escaped up the river without attracting much of any attention.

Ostergoth, who was the real leader of the party, had a wild scheme to
hurry up the river, pass the professor and the boys, arouse the natives,
attack the professor's party, plunder it of the goods, and then go still
farther inland with the girl.

The Swede did not believe they could be followed very far inland, and
it was his conviction that the interior of Africa was a second Eden, where
any one could lay around without work and live on wild fruits and game.
He painted a very alluring picture for his comrades in crime.

Ostergoth had a scheme to become king of some inland tribe, and to hold
Elsie Bellwood as his wife.

But Buntline and Jones were smitten by the girl's charms, and a quarrel
arose amid the villainous trio as to which one should have the unfortunate
captive.

Elsie's sufferings were intense. Much of the trip seemed like a moving
nightmare. After the gag was removed from her aching jaws, she was kept
silent much of the time under threats of death, but sometimes she did break
forth and express her agony in cries of distress.

Frank Merriwell had heard her cry out as she was being carried past
the village of Goumbi in the night. That cry had aroused him from a deep
slumber, and had haunted him afterward.

As the party proceeded, the quarrel over the girl became more violent.
At last it was decided that they should draw lots to see who should have
her.

Jones was the one who drew her, much to the girl's relief, for, although
he was a rascal, she did not fear him so much as the others.

But Ostergoth was not satisfied. He sulked, and was sullen; he declared
he had been robbed.

And then, when opportunity came, the Swede kidnapped her and fled into
the forest with her.

The man must have been deranged, else he would not have attempted such
a wild project. His companions followed him, swearing they would kill him
on sight, and he hid in the jungle, again forcing Elsie to be silent under
threat of death.

But Ostergoth simply rushed to his doom. Elsie told how they came suddenly
upon the gorilla, how the sailor had fired hastily at the beast, missing
in his excitement, how she had broken away and fled as the monster charged
upon the Swede.

The girl had fled till exhausted, but, with the seeming intelligence
of a human being, the gorilla had followed her. The brute had made her
a captive, but had not offered her any harm, for the boys came upon him
almost immediately, and he had fled, swinging into a tree with ease, for
all of his living burden.

The Frank Merriwell had shot the monster, and Elsie was saved.

Frank was greatly aroused when he heard the girl's story. He felt like
organizing a hunting party and tracking Buntline and Jones down, and he
urged such a course.

Elsie, however, rejoiced at her final safe escape from the ruffians,
objected to this.

"Let them go," she pleaded. "They will not dare return to the coast,
and they are liable to perish in the wilds of the forest.

Captain Bellwood had been greatly aroused against the kidnap[p]ers ,
but he listened to Elsie's words, feeling that he must not long leave the
Saucy
Susan without a master.

It was decided that the captain's party should return to the schooner
in the morning.

By this time night had fallen, and the hunters had not yet returned
with the dead gorilla, although they had been sent out for the beast immediately
upon the return of Frank and Ephraim to the camp.

Professor Bonner had been much exhausted by the day's journey, and he
sought sleep at an early hour.

The black men who had paddled the boats were likewise tired, and they
soon slept.

A few of the Commi men sat about the fires and told stories of Gorilla
hunts. They regarded Frank Merriwell with the greatest admiration.

Captain Bellwood and the first mate of the Saucy Susan smoked
and talked, while Ephraim listened, reclining on his elbow.

Where the firelight and shadows mingled, beneath the wide-spreading
branches of a great tree, Frank and Elsie were sitting. In a great measure
the girl had recovered from the frightful adventures through which she
had passed, and, although she was tired, knowing she must part from Frank
in the morning, she remained awake, chatting with him.

"You had better go back with me, Frank." urged the girl.

"Oh, no, Elsie. I have started with Professor Bonner on this search
for the Missing Link, and I cannot turn back at the outset."

"But think of the perils you will encounter."

"Some way perils add a fascination to this sort of venture."

"But think of Professor Scotch, your guardian. The poor man will go
crazy when he learns of this last venture of yours."

"Not when he knows I am with Johnson Bonner, his former schoolmate and
friend."

"But I am afraid to return alone to the vessel."

"Afraid?"

"Yes."

"What do you mean?"

"Why, see what befell me as soon as you left. If you had been there
I do not fancy those wretches would have succeeded in carrying me off."

"Thank you, Elsie. You say that very prettily, and I appreciate it,
but it is useless to urge me to return now. I am not in the habit of giving
up so easily when I have set out on an undertaking."

She gave a deep sigh.

"Well, I see it is useless to talk to you; you're set as the hills,
and I think you are just perfectly mean."

Then both laughed softly.

One by one, the black men were falling asleep; the fires were dying
down, and the talk between Captain Bellwood and the mate had ceased. Frank
Merriwell listened, a strange feeling of dread seizing upon his heart of
a sudden.

It seemed that the mighty forest was holding its breath, even the droning
of noctornal [sic] insects being hushed.

The fire flared from no apparent cause, and flung fantastic shadows
amid the underbrush.

What were those moving forms? Had the hunters returned with the dead
gorilla? Were they silently bringing the king of beasts into the camp?

Frank leaned forward, peering sharply at the shadows. His had sought
the butt of a revolver.

"What is it?" panted Elsie in his ear, frightened by his manner.

He did not answer, but he snatched out his revolver.

"Halt, there!" he cried.

A fierce yell ran through the forest, a yell that seemed answered by
a hundred echoes. Like panthers, the black shadows shot forward into the
firelight. They were human beings, armed with old muskets, spears, war
axes and other implements. Their faces and their bodies were painted in
many colors, and they were frightful to behold.

Some of these frightful beings who had guns began firing at the recumbent
figures of the Commi men. Some of them pinned the Commi men to the ground
with their long spears. Some of them brained the unresisting Commi men
with war axes.

In a moment frightful slaughter had begun.

"The Bakalai! the Bakalai!" shrieked the frightened black men from the
coast.

Hearing this, Frank Merriwell knew the fiercest warriors of Equatorial
Africa had made this night attack.

He began firing into the ranks of the assailants, taking care to make
every bullet count if possible.

As Ephraim Gallup scrambled blindly to his feet a hiddeously [sic]
painted warrior attempted to run him through with a spear.

Frank shot the warrior dead in his tracks.

Ephraim rose with his rifle in his grasp.

"Gold dern my punkins!" he shouted. I just wish I hed a Maxim gun! Git
aout, you painted niggers!"

Then he began firing. He closed both eyes and blazed away into the thick
of the attacking warriors.

Captain Bellwood and the mate got upon their feet and joined the battle.

The Commi men seemed demoralized and unable to offer any resistance,
but this was not true of the white men of the party. The sailors were slightly
bewildered at first, but they realized that they must fight for their lives,
and they lost little time in getting about it.

Captain Bellwood had thoroughly armed his party before venturing into
the wilderness, which was very fortunate.

The Bakalai warriors contin[u]ed to howl like a hundred fiends from
the infernal region, and their shrieks were sufficient to unnerve an ordinary
man.

But the black warriors knew little of magazine rifles and revolvers,
and they were astonished beyond measure when the white men continued to
shoot without stopping to reload. That was a marvel they could not understand.

"They are wizards! they are wizards!" shouted the Bakalai in their own
language.

As they saw their warriors dropping before the continued firing of the
white men, consternation seized upon them. The chief sounded the retreat,
and they disappeared into the darkness of the forest, vanishing like shadows,
as they had come like shadows.

There were many dead and wounded on the ground, but, for all of the
unexpected assault of the Bakalai, it was seen that they had suffered most.
The work of the repeating rifles and revolvers had been deadly, and many
of the painted blacks lay dead upon the ground.

The whites had not entirely escaped. One poor fellow had been run through
with a spear and had died quickly. Two others were wounded, and they feared
the weapons which had inflicted the wounds were poisoned.

As soon as it was certain the Bakalai had given over the assault and
retreated, Frank turned to look for Elsie.

She was gone!

He had believed she was close behind him, and he had fought like a Trojan
to defend her, now he was startled and astonished to find she was not beneath
the tree.

There was a great confusion in the camp. The Commi men were dispatching
the Bakalai warriors who had been too severely wounded to get away, and
shrieks and cries of rage mingled. Black forms rushed hither and thither.
In the midst of this Frank looked for Elsie.

"Where is she?" he asked himself. "Where has she fled?"

He felt that she must be near at hand, and yet his heart was filled
with alarm. He searched hastily through the camp, but found nothing of
her.

The thought that she had been carried away by the Bakalai warriors was
too horrible to entertain for a moment, but still it kept forcing itself
upon him.

Beneath the overspreading trees he called to her, peering into the shadows:

"Elsie! Elsie! Elsie!"

No answer.

Strong hands clutched Frank, a hoarse voice cried in his ear:

"Where is she --- where is my child?"

The firelight showed the smoke-grimed, anxious face of Captain Bellwood.
His fingers seems to sink into the boy's arm.

Frank lifted one hand, partially averting his head. The gesture spoke
plainer than words, and a groan escaped the captain.

"My God! what has happened to her? Have they killed her?"

"She is gone."

"Gone?"

"Yes. I have searched through the camp --- I have called her. I cannot
find her, and she does not answer."

"But she must be near --- she must be near! She is hiding somewhere!
She fled to some place of hiding when the attack begun [sic]."

"We will hope so."

The entire camp was soon searching for the missing girl; but they found
no trace of her. She had vanished, and the conviction that she had been
carried away by the Bakalai forced itself upon them.

Captain Bellwood's anguish was terrible. He prayed and he cursed. He
was like a man bereft of reason.

Frank Merriwell did not say much, but his face was hard and cold, and
there was a terrible glitter in his eyes. He drew Ephraim aside.

"I should have warned her not to leave me --- I should have told her
to remain close behind me."

"I dunno haow a feller could think uv everything in such a case as that.
By gum! ther way them painted skunks jumped aout uv the dark an' began
ter spear us like we was suckers was enough ter rattle anybody. We're dern
lucky ter be alive."

Frank's head was bowed; his eyes were upon the ground. For some moments
he was silent, hearing Captain Bellwood raving like a maniac. Then he shook
himself as if awakening from a trance.

"It cannot be that she remained close behind me," he said. "If she had
I should have heard her scream when she was clutched by those black fiends."

"That's so," nodded Ephraim.

"If I had heard her --- well, they would not have dragged her away while
I breathed!"

"I know it, Frank. Yeou'd 'a' fit, fought, an' died fer her."

"And still I feel that I am to blame --- I should have protected her.
I cannot help feeling that way.

"Yeou ain't to blame, gol derned ef yeou be!"

"But I shall ever feel that I am. I cannot look Captain Bellwood in
the face. His eyes accuse me. I turn from them. For the first time in my
life I feel like a guilty thing."

"Wal, what be yeou goin' ter do?"

"Do!" cried Frank fiercely. "I'll not rest till I have found and rescued
Elsie --- or avenged her!"

"By gosh! that's ther talk! I'm with ye, too!"

Captain Bellwood was no less determined to save his child if possible,
but he was too distracted to listen to reason. He believed it possible
to follow the Bakalai at once, and it was with no little difficulty that
he was restrained from rushing away into the forest in a wild pursuit of
them.

The Commi men, being peaceable and unwarlike, had been overcome with
terror and consternation by the attack of the Bakalai, whom they feared.
Several of the Commi had been killed, and their friends were wailing with
grief over the corpses, beating their breasts, and going through fantastic
ceremonies.

P[r]ofessor Bonner was greatly disturbed by what had taken place.

"It is most unfortunate --- most unfortunate," he declared to Frank,
when he found an opportunity to speak to the youth. "I fear it will ruin
our expedition in search of the Missing Link."

"That's right, professor," nodded Frank. "It is Elsie Bellwood that
we must think of now. We must rescue her. My blood freezes when I think
of the fate that may befall her amid those black devils."

"We'll do our best to find her,["] said the professor; "but I fear it
will be a fruitless search."

"Not for me," came hoarsely from Frank's lips. "If necessary, I will
devote the rest of my life to the task of tracing her and learning her
fate."

"I believe you, and I hope you may succeed; but it is a terrible task
you have before you. However, for the time being, I shall forget my mission
in Africa, and render you such assistance as possible.

It was found that the Commi men were so badly frightened that they felt
like turning back and hastening to their homes.

Frank, who had read much about the Bakalai, argued against this, telling
them that this was a band of raiders who had attacked them, and that the
band was far from its own people, being in a land of strangers and enemies.

The Bakalai, when on their raids, move swiftly and make short halts.
The party that had attacked the camp would hasten from that vicinity, fearing
that tribes of that section would be aroused against them.

The black fellows listened attentively to Frank, boy though he was.
They had seen him do wonderful shooting with his guns which he did not
seem to reload, and they considered him a wizard. It was not strange then
that, being a magician, he should no so much of the habits of the Bakalai,
even though his skin was white.

After much "palaver," it was finally decided that the relatives of the
dead and the wounded Commi men should take them back down the river in
a boat, while the others should stand by the expedition and go forward.

Having carried that point, Frank planned to induce them to pursue the
Bakalai raiders, and he was finally successful in his efforts.

The pursuit continued a full week, and then it was said that they were
on the very border of the Bakalai country, and there the Commi men revolted
and refused to go farther.

The tom-toms of Ouanga were beating, and the whole village was in an uproar.
Men and women were screaming and rushing about like frantic creatures.
All were armed, their eyes were blazing, and there seemed to thirst for
human blood.

Ouanga was a large village in the heart of the Bakalai country, and
to that place captive Elsie had been taken.

On the journey the two sailors, Buntline and Jones, had been seen and
captured. The poor wretches were nearly starved, and they offered but a
feeble resistance.

The sailors were treated as slaves, but they dared not rebel against
the black men, for they had been disarmed, and were wholly in the power
of their captors.

Several days had been occupied in the journey to Ouanga, and poor Elsie
was nearly crazed with despair when the place was finally reached. It did
not seem possible that her friends could follow her there and save her
from her black captors.

And what filled her with the greatest horror was the knowledge that
she was being taken to the king of the Bakalai, who had long desired a
white wife, having seen a white woman once upon a time.

She was treated with the utmost consideration by the fierce, warlike
black men, who, believing she would some day have influence with Adouma,
their king, did not wish her to enter complaint against them.

Buntline and Jones were forced to do a great deal of heavy work and
bear large burdens during the marches.

At first Elsie had pitied them, but when they looked at her there was
something in their eyes that made her shrink from them, and, after a little,
she began to trust more to the black men.

But it was not destined that Adouma should possess a white wife, for,
within an hour after Elsie had been brought into the village, he fell ill,
and his illness grew swiftly, so that he was completely prostrated in a
short time.

Several doctors attended the king. They beat on drums and kettles about
the bed on which he lay, trying to drive out the "evil spirits" which had
taken possession of him. They made racket enough to kill a man who was
moderately ill.

Adouma did not get better, despite the efforts of the doctors. On the
fourth day after being taken ill he died.

Then a sad wailing filled the village and chilled the blood of poor
Elsie. It was the saddest sound she had ever heard.

In the king's last moments his wives had come to him, and, one by one,
had flung themselves upon him, encircling his form with their arms, pouring
out torrents of endearing phrases, singing songs of love, and entreating
him not to leave them, while the whole village stood around wailing their
sorrow.

It was a touching spectacle. Elsie had witnessed it from a distance,
and her heart had been filled with pity for the poor unenlightened black
people.

The African negro has very vague ideas of the hereafter, and when a
friend or relative dies he says, "He is gone, he is dead, he is no more;
we shall never see him again."

And yet they believe in witchcraft, sorcery, and spirits, and they fear
their dead, as a rule. The Fans, alone, who are cannibals, seem devoid
of this fear.

On the day after the death of Adouma proceedings were begun to discover
the person or persons who had bewitched him. It was not thought possible
that he had died of natural causes.

From far up the river a woman witch doctor was brought. When she came
into Ouanga no one seemed to [k]now. She suddenly appeared in the village.

In front of the house of the dead king squatted, violently jangling
a harsh bell. Two attendants stood near, one of them beating a board with
two sticks, the other making strange and mysterious passes with his hands.

The people of the village came together on a run. The attendants motioned
them back, and they stood at a respectful distance. All were armed, and
the tom-toms beat. For a time great confusion existed, and then a strange
and awesome silence fell on the black throng.

Elsie looked out from the door of the hut in which she was confined,
and she beheld the most horrible spectacle.

The sun was sinking, and the afternoon was drawing towards its close.

The witch doctor had on a high head-dress of black feathers, Her eyelids
were painted red, and a red stripe from the nose upward divided the forehead
into two parts. Another red stripe passed around her head. The face was
painted white, and on either side of her mouth were two round red spots.
Around her neck was hung a necklace of glass, and a little cord which held
a box against he breast. This little box was supposed to be sacred and
contain spirits.

About the breast of the witch doctor and exposed about her person were
several strips of leopard skin, all of which were supposed to be charmed.
From each shoulder down to the hands were white stripes. One hand was painted
white; the other was blood red. There was a string of small bells around
her body.

This horrible-looking object squatted before a box that contained charms.
On this box stood a looking-glass, beside which lay a buffalo horn, containing
some black powder. This horn was said to be the refuge of many spirits.

The witch doctor had a little basket of snake bones, which she shook
at intervals. She also shook some skins, to which small bells were attached.

Over and over she kept repeating a strange gibberish, while the attendant
on her right beat on the board, and the one on her left made the mystic
passes.

After a time the witch doctor seemed to fall into a trance.

Then a most horrible hubbub followed, gradually settling into a wild,
weird chant to the spirit of the moon, which was now seen pale and wan
in the sky, the sun having set.

The song was as follows:

"Ilogo, we ask thee!Tell who hath bewitched the king!"Ilogo, we ask thee!Tell who hath destroyed the king!"The forests are thine, Ilogo!The rivers are thine, Ilogo!The moon is thine!O moon! O moon! O moon!Thou art the house of Ilogo!Why did the king die?Who slew the king?"Ilogo, we ask thee!For the king is dead;We would know who hath destroyed him."

Fascinated and filled with fear, Elsie Bellwood watched the ceremony from
the door of the house where she was confined.

Fires were kindled, throwing flaring lights on the town, and the river,
which seemed to lay without current, like a sluggish pool.

At last the witch doctor stirred and sat up. Instantly an expectant
silence fell on the assembled throng.

"I have seen Ilogo,: declared the fakir. "Ilogo spoke to me. He told
me there were three strangers in your town --- three strangers whose faces
are white as the face of the moon."

"It is true," muttered many voices.

"One of them is a woman," said the witch doctor[.] "She it was who bewitched
the king."

A mad howl of fury went up from the mob.

"She shall drink the mboundou!" cried the witch doctor.

"She shall drink the mboundou!" howled the crowd.

"But there are others!" cried the witch doctor.

"There are others!" shrieked the throng. "Let us know them! They shall
drink the mboundou!"

The "mboundou" is a poison decoction which the witch doctors seem able
to drink in large quantities, but which invariably kills all others. By
the witch doctors it is said to be a test of innocence. If the one charged
with the crime drinks it and lives, it proves him innocent.

"The tall white man aided in bewitching the king," declared the witch
doctor. "He hoped to become king in Adouma's stead."

"He shall drink the mboundou!" shouted the mob, waving their weapons
in the air.

"The short white man aided in bewitching the king," asserted the witch
doctor. "He was tired of being a slave."

"He shall drink the mboundou!"

"These are the three who destroyed the king. Bring them quickly. The
mboundou shall be prepared. Bring them to me."

Away rushed the wild mob. Elsie had retreated, horrified and cowering
with terror, into the house. They did not wait to enter; they tore down
the house about her, and dragged her away to the witch doctor.

A great calm came to the unfortunate girl. She did not weep, and she
did not show despair.

"It is better so," she said, in a whisper. "This fate is preferable
to becoming the wife and slave of one of these black wretches."

She saw Buntline and Jones dragged to the place of execution. They were
nearly naked, and their eyes were filled with unspeakable fear.

The poison draught was prepared, and the executioner appeared. He was
a giant, fierce of face, with teeth filed to points, and stained black.
He carried a short heavy sword.

Once more a hush had fallen on the mad throng. They stood staring and
waiting, quivering in every limb, their nostrils dilated. The witch doctor
chanted fiercely, seeming to rejoice in her bloody work. More than ever
did she look like some Satanic thing.

The "mboundou" was passed to Buntline. He shrank back. Then he was ordered
to drink it, or die at once, and the executioner raised his weapon.

With a curse, the sailor took the bowl and drank. For some moments it
did not affect him visibly, and something like a feeling of disappointment
was coming to the spectators when he was seen to stagger.

Instantly a mad howl went up. Buntline was caught and held, and, a second
later, his head fell to the ground, severed from his body by the sword
of the executioner.

This bloody work was repeated with Jones. The man struggled with all
his strength to resist the poison draught, but his efforts were of no avail.
At last he swayed, and then that fierce howl went up again. A second later
his head dropped.

She lifted her eyes and her lips moved in prayer. The ghostly moonlight
rested on her pale, sweet face. Her golden hair, tangled and twisted, fell
about her shoulders.

"Drink!" harshly cried the witch doctor.

"Drink!" roared the multitude of black men and women.

She reached out her hands to take the fatal bowl.

At this moment there was a report like the roar of many cannon, causing
the ground to reel beneath the feet. On the four sides of the town clouds
of fire leaped towards the sky, making the night bright as day for one
fearful moment, and then dying out, to leave the darkness dense and terrible,
for a pall of smoke arose and obscured the thin white moon.

The fires within the town flared and sunk, the roof of a hut fell in
with a crash, and the natives were paralyzed with fear.

Then a most frightful creature advanced towards the spot where the executions
were taking place. It was like a man, but every part of its body seemed
glowing with fire, red flames leaped from the top of its head, in its right
hand it held a whirling wheel of colored fire, while in its left hand was
a squirming serpent of green and blue. It opened its mouth and poured forth
a stream of fire and smoke.

"Ilogo --- it is Ilogo!" shrieked the appalled natives, and they fell
prostrate on their faces, covering their eyes from the frightful spectacle.

For a long time they remained thus. When they looked up, the terrible
vision of fire had vanished, and the white maiden was not to be seen.

The natives looked at each other, wonder and fear written on their faces.

"Ilogo has taken her away," they said. "He has carried her to the moon!
Great is Ilogo!"

Elsie had been scarcely less startled than the natives were when the
explosion took place and the fiery vision appeared. She stood with the
fatal cup still clutched in her hands, seeming turned to stone.

The creature of fire advanced straight toward her. When the natives
fell on their faces, the flaming being flung aside the whirling wheel of
flame and the squirming serpent, dashed the blazing thing from its head,
with its hands beat out some burning spots about its person, and then clutched
Elsie.

The girl did not cry out; fear froze her tongue. She felt herself lifted
with wonderful strength, flung over a strong shoulder, carried away as
if she were a sack of grain.

The girl felt that nothing more appalling could happen than had already
taken place, and she resigned herself to fate.

After a little she heard the one who was carrying her begin to breathe
heavily. They were beyond the limits of the town, and darkness had closed
around them, pierced dimly by the misty moonlight.

"I have saved you, little sweetheart --- I have saved you! We arrived
in time, thank Heaven!"

She was lowered to the ground, strong arms were about her, and a familiar
voice sounded in her ears.

"Frank!"

She nearly swooned from joy as the word came to her lips. She clutched
him with all her strength, and she clung to him, panting:

"Don't let them take me away from you again!" Don't let them kill me,
as they killed Buntline and Jones! Oh, it was terrible --- terrible."

"Never fear, dearest! They shall not take you from me again. They may
kill us both, but they shall not take you from me while I live!"

She feared it was all a dream --- feared she would awaken to find herself
still a captive among the terrible savages.

"If it is a dream I hope I may never awaken!" she murmured.

"It is no dream. Elsie," he assured her; "I am here, and you are saved."

"But how can it be true? They carried me miles upon miles into this
wild land. How could you find me?"

"We followed --- your father, Professor Bonner, Ephraim, and myself.
The Commi men came to the very borders of the Bakalai land and then their
hearts failed them. Mpomo and Okandaga we induced to stand by us and follow
the trail. They led us here. By our united efforts we have rescued you,
although we came near being too late."

He kissed her again and again, and the joy of that moment seemed to
smother her so it was with great difficulty that she could breathe.

After a time she asked:

"Father --- where is he?"

"We shall find him soon. He aided in exploding the bombs which so frightened
the natives. Professor Bonner is a very shrewd man, and he knew fireworks
would terrify the natives, so he brought along a supply for that very purpose,
in case it was necessary to give them a fright. All this afternoon, since
finding where they had taken you, we have been at work manufacturing bombs,
every one of which was exploded on opposite sides of the town at a given
signal. The I appeared with a fire fountain on my head, a pinwheel in one
hand, and a fire serpent in the other, while some powders burned on various
parts of my person. Years ago I learned the magician's trick of blowing
fire and smoke from my mouth. I had prepared for that, and it helped to
paralyze the natives. The only damage I sustained came from a few burns
given me by the blazing powders; but I had to beat out the flames in a
hurry when I saw the trick had worked all right, and the black rascals
were nearly scared out of their senses."

"It is wonderful --- wonderful!" declared Elsie. "I had given up to
die --- I was ready to drink the poison."

When she had gained her strength somewhat they moved toward the place
of meeting agreed upon by the rescuers. When they arrived there, Captain
Bellwood was waiting. He clasped Elsie in his arms, uttering a prayer of
thankfulness.

The others came up shortly, and then there was a general handshaking.
Mpomo and Okandaga, the two black men who had stood by them and guided
them to the village where the captive maiden had been taken, were praised
and promised rewards. They were very proud of what they had done.

Elsie told how she had fled in terror when the Bakalai warriors had
attacked the camp, and had run straight into the clutches of the savages.
One of them had attempted to slay her, but he had been checked by the others,
and they had carried her away to become the wife of their king.

Although Elsie had been rescued, the little party was far from the coast
in a land where perils abounded. They knew that the Bakalai might recover
and pursue them, and they knew they might encounter hundreds of dangers;
but their hearts were strong when they turned their faces toward the Fernand
Vas and the Saucy Susan.

They passed through many dangers during their retreat to the coast,
but Commi land was reached at last, and the band was unbroken.

Mpomo and Okandaga were given many presents, so that they became two
of the "richest" men of their tribe, and were much envied by the others.

Captain Bellwood gave thanks when he stood upon the deck of his vessel,
with Elsie by his side. He declared it was the happiest moment of his life.

"What do I not owe to you, Frank Merriwell!" he said, regarding the
boy affectionately. "Twice you have saved my child from certain death.
It is not in my power to sufficiently reward you."

"It may be some time," smiles Frank, with a significant look at Elsie
--- a look that brought color to her face.

Professor Bonner had not given up the project of finding the "Missing
Link."

"I will penetrate to the land where those creatures are said to be,
or I will leave my bones in Africa," he declared.

"Wal," drawled Ephraim Gallup, "I've had abaout all I want uv this country,
by gum! an' I'm reddy to git aout. Frank Merriwell may be a gol dern fool
an' try it aga'n but I don't believe he will."

"No," smiled Frank, "I hardly think I will. I have been prevailed upon
to sail north with Captain Bellwood. There are other countries I want to
see now."

Professor Bonner went back to resume his remarkable search. He disappeared
into the great forests of Equatorial Africa, from which he has never come
forth. It may be that he has perished in that land, and it may be that
he will some day come forth to astound the world with proof of the existence
of the "Missing Link."

[THE END.]

"FRANK MERRIWELL'S MAGIC; or, THE PEARL OF TANGIER," by the author of "Frank
Merriwell," will be published in the next number (29) of the TIP TOP LIBRARY.